Full Issue:

Immediately after the announcement that supplies of flu vaccine would be half what
was expected, Lyndon LaRouche called for treating the situation as a medical emergency
and getting the “relevant institutions tasked to come up with an approach to this,
and whatever it takes, do the job.” The most urgent points for consideration are:
how the current emergency should be dealt with; and how the thinking and practices
must be stopped which, over the past four decades, took down America’s public health
system, and made the United States vulnerable to all kinds of microbial and other
health threats. Linda Everett and Marcia Merry Baker report.

National

Besides displaying his mental instability in the Oct. 13 debate, President Bush kept
up his litany of lies. As for Senator Kerry, he touched on real economic issues—such
as poverty and health care—but didn’t really discuss economics. This defines the necessity
of a dominant LaRouche role within a Kerry Administration.